The United States will not provide the Palestinian militant group Hamas, a
U.S.-listed terrorist organization, with any funding, acting spokesman of the
State Department Tom Casey said in Washington Monday.
"The United States cannot, by law, and will not provide any
funding that will go to Hamas," Casey told a regular news briefing.
Hamas is formally called the Islamic Resistance Movement.
However, Casey noted that the United States will consider the humanitarian
needs of the Palestinian people.
"We believe it's important that we take into consideration the needs of the
humanitarian needs of the Palestinian people. We're committed to supporting
those humanitarian needs, and we're going to be looking to see how we can do
that," he said.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Sunday that the Bush
administration is contemplating an increase of aid to the Palestinian people
while it bars direct aid to the Palestinian Authority if its Hamas-led
government refuses to abandon its anti-Israel policies.
The United States "remains absolutely committed to a better life for the
Palestinian people. I emphasize that we are looking at ways to even increase our
humanitarian assistance for the Palestinian people," the New York Times quoted
Rice as saying on the plane to Brazil.
The United States has cut off aid to the Palestinian authority and asked for
a return of 50 million dollars for reconstruction projects since Hamas was
elected to a legislative majority in January.
But Washington provides food, health care and other aid to Palestinians
through contributions to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, the World
Food Program and other agencies, including private groups operating in Gaza and
the West Bank, U.S. officials said.